Edgeworth Garden Shows A European Flair

After growing up among steel mills near Dusseldorf, Germany, Juergen felt very much at home when he moved to Pittsburgh in the 1970s. But he wasn’t as comfortable in the 1950s red-brick Colonial he and his wife, Renate, bought in Edgeworth in 1986. It was large enough for the couple and their four sons, but it had a small entrance and lacked character.

With the help of Gretchen of Design, the couple added a foyer and portico with six in front. Then, in 2006 and 2007, they had landscape architect Ed Werley of Werley Associates and contractor Eichenlaub transform the grounds around the house. Now Mr. feels at home.

Although the house separates the front and back areas, the garden is unified by repetition and contrast, both of naturally mounding plants like azalea, spirea and and of curving of sheared hornbeams and boxwood. The rows of tall hornbeams, in particular, give the front a formal, European feel. Recently, Hilbish McGee added low-voltage lighting that highlights the hornbeams, facade and other features at night.

In the front and back, large uplights catch the huge old and that form the backdrop for the new landscaping and, in one sense, inspired it. After large limbs nearly struck the house during a storm, Mr. decided it was time for a big change, starting with the elevations. Mr. Werley, who works with his son, John, said the was raised 3 feet and a series of installed around a central curving staircase of carved .

were added near the street to create a dropoff area and are repeated in the walkways and a landing. There, a sculpture of upright logs cast in bronze by Calaboyias is the center of a fountain. Originally on the side of the house, it was moved “for greater visual impact,” Mr. Werley said. At night, the hornbeams also pack a , each with its own uplight.

“There’s a lot going on there, but it’s not bright. It’s subtle,” said Halbane Hilbish, principal owner of Hilbish McGee and a member of the International Association of Lighting Designers.

In the back, Mr. Hilbish subtly lit Japanese , weeping Camperdown elms and low topped by loose hedges of and blue holly and rows of spirea and cranberry bush viburnum. Three weeping cherries and other specimen trees were salvaged from an earlier redesign and reused.

Other older elements play parts in the new design. A new arched gate leads to “the treehouse,” where the four boys held countless sleepovers. They’re now ages 30, 27, 25 and 18. The new curving stone walls bracket a new cedar garden house built by Vixen Hill, and new sheared boxwood hedges line the new conservatory. More ‘Winter Gem’ boxwood and a bay window frame a Japanese Stewartia that has been limbed up slightly to enhance the view of the garden. Around its base are Yak rhododendrons, fothergilla and ‘Goldflame’ spirea.

“The spirea has flowers and nice fall color — a yellowish red,” said Ryan Johnson, project administrator for Eichenlaub.

He said the hardest part of this project was access — a road had to be cut from front to back — and finding space to stockpile and materials. When it was finished, it won an Award for Excellence from the Pennsylvania and Nursery Association.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

Surprise Denny’s declared landmark

Call it a Grand Slam of Googie proportions.

A city board stunned developers, preservationists and Ballard residents Wednesday by voting 6-3 to designate the boarded-up Denny’s Restaurant at Northwest Market Street and 15th Avenue Northwest a landmark based largely on the the structure’s Googie-esque roofline delivers to passing motorists.

The Landmarks Preservation Board’s decision which rejected its own staff’s recommendation against the designation represents a significant setback for the property owner, the Benaroya Companies, which acquired the site in 2006 for more than $12 million and intended to sell it to a condominium developer.

The owner’s representative, attorney John McCullough, warned the board before the vote that it would lose its credibility if it designated the structure as a city landmark.

After the vote, McCullough said the matter may be appealed to the city’s hearing examiner. Under city rules, the board’s staff members will now draw up an agreement that outlines what must be preserved.

The board reviews and approves that agreement, which is forwarded as an ordinance to the City Council for action.

The board’s vote represents “a victory of sentimentality over the laws under which the board is supposed to operate,” McCullough said.

Most city landmarks are designated based on several criteria, but the divided board took the rare step Wednesday of basing its decision on just one that the building is “an easily identifiable visual feature of its neighborhood” and contributes to the identity of Ballard.

More than 600 people, including national experts on Googie architecture and staff members from the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation, supported the designation.

Many residents spoke fondly of the razzle-dazzle, space-age charm the building had when it opened as Manning’s Cafeteria in 1964. (Denny’s Restaurants took it over in 1983 and shut down the restaurant late last year.)

“Ballardites proudly called it the Taj Mahal of Ballard,” said Mildred Andrews, a local historian.

Back then, diners could look to the rafters and enjoy the vaulted ceiling.

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Friday, February 22nd, 2008